Underwhelming heist film in which a likable group of unemployed Belgian steel workers plot an armed robbery over their daily card game, along with a taciturn former con (the film's director Lucas Belvaux, in a role not too far from the armed robber he played in his 2002 Trilogy). These are good guys who have been dealt a crappy hand, and some of their scenes, shot with unfussy camerawork, are compelling. But Belvaux's film fails to add anything to previous explorations of male identities dismantled by the demise of heavy industry; we've been here before, most obviously 10 years ago with The Full Monty. Belvaux sets up a potentially probing game of moral Twister, asking how much responsibility these desperate men have for their criminal and ultimately selfish act, but the result is curiously semi-detached.